PREVENTING MUSIC DATA DEATH

21st April 2023

Do you own music as data? How do you store it? Hard disk? CD? DVD? Something else? How do you protect it? How do you stop it from dying? Paul Rigby is your chairman

So yes, this one isn’t really for those digital music fans who stream only. It’s for those digital music fans who like to own their data. 

This feature is both simple – as it forms a sort of introduction on the subject – but also complex because I feel that I could run into a hundred directions at once here. I’ll try and restrain myself to a brief introduction. If you want me to investigate anything I talk about here in more depth – give me a shout in the Comments. 

This piece is not a buyer’s guide, it’s not a ‘how to’ and there are no Top 10 lists here. I’m not even presenting myself as some sort of expert. In any way. In fact, I may be ‘doing it wrong’. Who knows?

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

In this article I will be sharing with you the tools and accessories I use to store my data. Tools that are sometimes decades old, actually. 

I’ll be sharing some information with you on backing up your music data, archiving it, if you like. Keeping it from harm and stopping it dying a death, to be more specific.

Oh and the star of this piece isn’t me – it’s you. Have a read first to see where I’m coming from on this subject and then please, tell me how you store and protect your data. Maybe you don’t – maybe you’ve never even thought of backing up your data. Are you ok with that? Does it matter to you if you don’t back up? And if you do, tell me about your successes but also tell me about your failures. Why? Because I want to learn from you. I want you to educate me. I want to get better at this. I learn just as much from failures as I do from successes. 

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

The reason?

Well, I currently have around 5,000 vinyl records (and I have tried to keep that number down because of storage limitations), I have around 2,000 CDs – again, similar reasons. I also have around 500 cassette tapes of music. Again, same reasons. All are relatively easy to maintain in terms of condition. Each has their issues, yes. But on the whole, I don’t have too many problems.

Now even though I come over as Mr Vinyl or at least Mr Physical Media, I do love digital. Surprise, eh? In fact I have around 36TB – possibly a lot more – of original musical data (not backups of my physical media, original, unique data) that spans all genres and all time periods from the present day to the dawn of time.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

 

Having 36TB of data worries the hell out of me. When tomorrow comes, will it all be gone? It’s possible.

So how do I store this stuff? Mainly? Hard disks. I have been using mechanical hard disks for decades. Normally to a maximum of 4TB. I don’t really trust storage sizes larger than that. The larger the storage pot? The finer the tolerances, the greater the risk for failure. At least, that used to be my mantra.

SSD may have that issue beaten and I have started to bring in SSD, firstly to back up files on my laptop. 

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

I also use disc. CD is a minor media, I mostly utilise DVD to store data files but physical storage issues raise their head again while the media itself always includes a measure of doubt in terms of longevity. 

OK, I’m already running out of space and I’ve yet to address the main points so let’s quickly do that. Now I’ve already said that I am not an expert. So, first up? Let’s quickly look at one  

THE EXPERT

Around five years ago I interviewed a gentleman in the USA sporting the wonderful name of George Blood. Blood used to be national syndicator of fine arts programming on the radio known as WFMT-FM in Chicago, back in the early 80s. That’s how he first came into contact with music data. Now? He has his own archiving business, a staff of 35 and he handles 11,000 items a month for clients such as government agencies, independent companies and cultural heritage organisations. He handles everything from 78s to video tape to vinyl to cassettes to the most obscure recording media and machines you’ve ever seen in your life. He handles data formats you’ve never even heard of. 

His office is packed with obsolete hardware to play the things. It’s a museum of audio wonder. I’d rather visit George’s office than Disney Land.

If you have ever visited archive.org and seen the massive collection of digitised 78 recordings they have there? That was George. He used a unique turntable to do the job. A Technics SP-15 turntable fixed to a custom plinth with four Jelco tonearms using different stylus tip sizes to get the best recording from each. So he would spin the record once and take four different recordings to find the best one. George had 30 tips sizes for the project. 

The man is an expert. He knows his stuff. 

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

The main thing I learned from George? It was this quote:  “You keep things alive by keeping them on the move.”

That is, the one thing you can depend on from an archival media is that it will die. All hard disks will fail, all tape will degrade, all vinyl will wear out. Everything will fail. Everything will die. 

You keep your data in existence by keeping it moving, from one media to another. Constantly. It never ends.

If it does? So will your data.

Just some of the goodies in George Blood’s company – all working, I hasten to add.

So what do I do? Because of time, because of my personal history, my data lives on a variety of technologies. As new storage media is invented, I’ll hop on that bandwagon but I tend to retain the older tech as well. Just in case. I like to spread my eggs around many baskets. 

Anyway, here is what I do. I want to hear what you do.

HARD DISKS

I use and have used physical hard disks to store the majority of my data for many years. They’re old but they still work – for now. I have no brand favourites although I have had more bad experiences with Western Digital but that could just be my bad luck.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

I normally go for 4TB as a storage/price sweet spot, as I say. They are stored in a dry, temperate room and – importantly – I run them up and get them working every few months.

Don’t leave mechanical hard disks idle for too long or you risk them seizing up. 

BACK UP OF A BACK UP

I then back up my cased hard disks with internal hard disks. So these are back up of back ups. Insurance, you might say, if the original back up fails. These are often a little cheaper because they have no case. 

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

If I need to make a back up of a back up, I plug my cased hard disk into my desktop computer. Then I plug my internal hard disk inside this now rather battered interface.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

I plug that into my desktop computer too. Then I transfer data from one disk to another.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

I store my internal hard disks inside these secure and padded cases to keep them save.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

I use these cases to store and protect my internal hard disks

Again, I give these hard disks a regular run out too.

OPTICAL MEDIA

I use DVDs from JVC but it’s not JVC I was originally aiming for, it was the original manufacturer. The name behind JVC. Specifically. a Japanese brand named Taiyo Yuden (pronounced Hi-Yo Yuden).

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

These are the real thing, yes. This pack is one of a limited number of ‘old stock’ I have

Taiyo Yuden appear to be respected in archival circles and were actually involved in the development of the recordable CD so they know their stuff. Taiyo Yuden have – or at least had – a controlling interest in JVC media. Hence the brand here. You can apparently still find Taiyo Yuden disks on Amazon and other online retailers but I’m not 100% how ‘original’ these discs are. I have heard that the company no longer produce discs so new/old stock is probably your best best.

I did a fair bit of research a long time ago on this and Taiyo Yuden were seen as the most reliable – even though slightly more expensive – optical disc storage option out there 

STORING DISK MEDIA

Storing DVD discs was another problem because jewel cases take up too much space on the shelf. Many years ago, I found a Dutch company (whose name I now cannot remember) who sold these disk pockets.

They hold three discs, the inner pocket features a soft non-aggressive material while the outer pocket features a thicker, tougher material. I then throw a simple sticker on the front labelling the contents.

PREVENTING MUSICAL DATA DEATH

And now they’ve got out of business and I’m fretting. Does anyone know of a bagging media that is similar to this one or does anyone know of old stocks of these things?

I have seen cheap Chinese bags that hold two discs but they appear to be less robust and there’s that two disc storage instead of three.

SSD

SSD remains an unknown quantity because no-one really knows how it will perform in 20 or 30 years time. No one really knows how current SSD technology will last. How robust it really is. I have big hopes though. 

I have started to utilise larger SSD units for back up but I also use SD and miniSD cards contained in a storage container which I have neglected to properly catalogue.

Time is an issue in my job. A project for a rainy day, methinks. So far, this option is proving a good one in terms of price and storage capacity.

And that’s it basically. I haven’t mentioned hard disk RAID systems, I know. I’ve thought about that area but money has always been an issue. But tell me if you use a RAID. 

I haven’t used data tape either. Have you? And what else is there? Did I miss anything? Tell me if I have. Tell me about the media use use, if any. Tell me what system or system you use. Do you back up your back ups? Do you store off site in case of fire or break ins? I don’t but I should really. I’d love to learn how you keep your musical data safe. 

If you like this kind of feature, I can do more and I can deep dive into formats and techniques and the even review media and systems as long as there is a musical data connection, of course. Let me know. 

Until then? Keep that data moving, people